Minutes to Midnight

Minutes to Midnight

★★★★

Online

Minutes to Midnight

Minutes to Midnight

Tête à Tête Opera Festival 2020 available online

Reviewed – 18th September 2020

★★★★

 

“From this unlikely subject matter, Sturt and Chapadjiev have created an extraordinary work of vivid contrasts”

 

Minutes to Midnight, Minute Hand Opera’s “avant-premiere” opera, with music by John Sturt and words by Sophia Chapadjiev, was created by a company working from locations as far apart as Chicago, New York and London. It’s a new opera that is part of a socially distanced live performance series at the Cockpit Theatre brought together by the Tête á Tête Opera Festival. But if you missed the September 16th performance in house, or the September 18th interactive broadcast online, don’t worry. Last night’s interactive broadcast will be available online for 28 days.

Minutes to Midnight is about two young American missileers—a term which describes the highly trained specialists who man the nuclear intercontinental ballistic missile systems in silos dug into American’s heartland. Martínez and Walker, aged 24 and 22, are on duty the night of the 2016 election, awaiting the outcome of a highly divisive election. As we soon discover, the job of missileer lacks the dangers of the battlefield, despite the fact that these young men are at the controls of the deadliest weapons of them all. Instead, the missileers’ job is a constant struggle to maintain alertness in isolation, and to overcome boredom. All the while being ready to turn the keys that could reduce the world to ashes. As a defence against the same daily routines, they play card games when not studying or resting. It’s a solitary life at the bottom of a hole in a landscape that battles extremes of temperature as the seasons change.

From this unlikely subject matter, Sturt and Chapadjiev have created an extraordinary work of vivid contrasts. With the help of video excerpts depicting a choir of female singers in summer dresses outdoors in pastoral landscapes, Minutes to Midnight begins with God’s creation of the world and brings us rapidly to the moment in 1945 when nuclear weapons were detonated over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The action then switches to a live broadcast of the two missileers in their silo, aka the stage of the Cockpit Theatre. As the missileers sing their story, they are periodically interrupted by director Eleanor Strutt, also on stage, who provides commentary on how Minutes to Midnight was created.

This production of Minutes to Midnight is forty minutes of what is obviously a much longer work. It is also an ingenious solution to the problem of bringing together a socially distanced cast and musicians for a limited amount of time. Given the subject matter, it’s a highly relevant nod to safe practices in both our nuclear and COVID-19 afflicted age. With safety concerns at the forefront, the audience, both socially distanced in the theatre, and online, is free to focus on the opera. The video chorus of the Trinity Set—Kerry Firth, Anna Marmion, and Kate Robson—is appropriately celestial in tone. Lawrence Gillians, as First Lieutenant A.J. Martínez, and Andrew Woodmansey, as Second Lieutenant Joseph Walker, on stage, are also very good as the young missileers. The musicians and the Radio Announcer (Mike Sturt) are all pre-recorded, but effective. Sturt’s music is the perfect foil for Chapadjiev’s libretto, covering a range of experiences from God’s creation of “tigers and beasts and dinosaurs” to the missileers’ mundane (and profane) experience of life in the silos. “It’s fucking freezing down here” and “winter nips at my balls” are just a couple of memorable lines in an opera that depicts life on the American plains. This study in extreme contrasts is just one of the rewards of Minutes to Midnight.

It’s difficult to assess the whole work from excerpts of course, but the version of Minutes to Midnight that Minute Hand Opera produced for 2020 is absolutely worth 40 minutes of your time online. There’s also a panel discussion “Who Holds the Bombs?” that follows. Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Claire Shovelton

 

Tete a Tete


Minutes to Midnight

Tête à Tête Opera Festival 2020 available online

Previously reviewed by Dominica:
Jason Kravits – Off The Top | ★★★★★ | Live At Zédel | January 2020
Us Two | ★★★ | The Space | January 2020
Crybabies: Danger Brigade | ★★★ | The Vaults | March 2020
Fireworks | ★★★ | The Vaults | March 2020
Luna | ★★ | The Vaults | March 2020
Our Man In Havana | ★★★★ | The Vaults | March 2020
Revisor | ★★★★★ | Sadler’s Wells Theatre | March 2020
Sky In The Pie | ★★★ | The Vaults | March 2020
The Revenger’s Tragedy (La Tragedia Del Vendicatore) | ★★★★★ | Barbican | March 2020
The Tempest | ★★★★ | Jermyn Street Theatre | March 2020

 

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